Our sense of what 'poetry' means will probably be changed by the internet just as surely as our conception of the "Victorian" will be changed. The first because we will locate poetry and theories of poetry. .. in 'unofficial' class and gender contexts, British and American. Poetry in Eliza Cook's Journal will look different than the poetry published by, say, The Monthly Repository or in Scribner's. The second because we will probe "unofficial" history as well.. .. [W]e will undo the very notion of a central, dominant historical narrative for the nineteenth century.-Isobel Armstrong, "The Victorian Poetry Party" 1